G'day
A couple of everyday cars back we used a Mk2 Jaguar. Lovely period car but
terrible to work on, so much so that if a spanner fitted it was probably a
Jaguar design fault.
One summer it developed a terrible dead animal smell. We looked for the
source everywhere without success. Some weeks later I turned the heater on
and almost had to get out of the car as the smell became far worse.
It turned out that there was a dead mouse in the heating system. It must
have worked it way in and when one of the heating flaps was actuated it was
squashed. Four hours later I had the heater apart and squishy mouse was
removed.
Just a month later the car expired in a flailing of chains followed by
valves crashing into pistons. That was followed by a XJ6 mobile oil change.
Hoo Roo
Patrick Quinn
Sydney, Australia
-----Original Message-----
From: healeys-bounces+p_cquinn=tpg.com.au@autox.team.net
[mailto:healeys-bounces+p_cquinn=tpg.com.au@autox.team.net] On Behalf Of Tom
Felts
Sent: Saturday, 29 September 2007 10:37 AM
To: Bob Johnson; Healeys
Subject: Re: [Healeys] True Friday Funny:Nuts
You ever had roasted mouse?
> [Original Message]
> From: Bob Johnson <robert.w.johnson@charter.net>
> To: Healeys <healeys@autox.team.net>
> Date: 9/28/2007 3:45:27 PM
> Subject: [Healeys] True Friday Funny:Nuts
>
> Yesterday my wife and I were out and about in her 1995 Camry (the car
that I
> wish she would trade.) Had lunch and then decided to go up the road a
bit to
> a different shopping center. As we went up the interstate, we noticed a
> burning smell. We were behind a large truck and the smell was like that
of
> wood smoke. Looked at car gauges but didn't see anything out of order
and car
> was handling fine so decided it must be the truck or wondered that even
with
> our serious drought situation here in NC that maybe some nut had an
outside
> wood fire disregarding the drought or even worse, a forest fire.
>
> Got off highway, smell seemed to abate. Quit worrying, stopped and
shopped.
>
> On way home, about 10 miles, we again were in crawling traffic and again
> noticed our wood burning smell. Dash looked fine, car was handling fine,
but
> we decided to pull off to investigate further. As we pulled off we
noticed
> smoke coming out from the area of the right front wheel area and from the
> hood area over that. Opened the hood....I stepped back wondering if she
was
> going to get a new car out of this.
>
> The hood opened and sure enough, we had lots of smoke and there in an area
> between the exhaust manifold and the engine block there were smoking, red
> glowing, spherical objects with a mighty smell. On further investigation,
> these objects were found to be acorns! Apparently a squirrel or rat or
> something was storing their winter supply there. I've never smelled
chestnuts
> roasting on a open fire, but let me assure you acorns stink!
>
> Unfortunately, we seem to be getting the stink out. Damn, she still won't
> trade.
>
>
> Bob Johnson
> BJ8
_______________________________________________
Healeys@autox.team.net
http://autox.team.net/mailman/listinfo/healeys
|